Inspired as much by breakfast cereal and kiddie TV as by rock music, the punk-pop cult band
Redd Kross was the brainchild of
Steve and
Jeff McDonald, brothers from the Los Angeles suburb of Hawthorne (also home of
the Beach Boys) who began playing music together before either had hit puberty. Fueled by a series of dubious visits to famed area rock clubs like the Roxy and the Whiskey-a-Go-Go, they formed their first band,
the Tourists, in 1978;
Jeff, then 15, handled vocal duties while
Steve, 11, took up the bass.
After rounding out the group with schoolmates
Greg Hetson on guitar and
Ron Reyes on drums,
the Tourists played their first gig, opening for
Black Flag. Following a name change to
Red Cross, they issued their self-titled EP debut in 1980. After the departure of
Hetson and
Reyes (for
the Circle Jerks and
Black Flag, respectively), the McDonalds enlisted a revolving line-up of underground musicians for their full-length follow-up, 1981's
Born Innocent, which found the group's pop-culture obsessions bubbling over on tributes like "Linda Blair" and "Charlie" (about
Charles Manson, whose "Cease to Exist" they also covered).
Following the album's release, the band was threatened with a lawsuit from the real International Red Cross; as a result, they became
Redd Kross, and returned in 1984 with
Teen Babes from Monsanto, a collection of covers of artists ranging from
David Bowie to
the Rolling Stones and
the Shangri-Las. That year, they also appeared in and composed the music for the no-budget film
Desperate Teenage Lovedolls, which included their transcendent cover of
the Brady Bunch's "(It's A) Sunshine Day."
Complete with new guitarist
Robert Hecker and drummer
Roy McDonald (no relation) 1987's
Neurotica, with songs like "Frosted Flake," "The Ballad of Tatum O'Tot and the Fried Vegetables" and "Janus, Jeanie and George Harrison," appeared primed to push the band out of the underground; shortly after the album's release, however, their label Big Time folded, and legal hassles prevented
Redd Kross from recording any new material under its own name for three years.
Instead, as
the Tater Totz, the McDonald brothers corralled
Three O'Clock member
Michael Quercio and former
Partridge Family kid
Danny Bonaduce for 1989's
Alien Sleestaks From Brazil, the title a nod to the Sid and Marty Krofft children's series Land of the Lost. A collection of satiric and surreal covers, the LP included renditions of "Give Peace a Chance," "We Will Rock You" and
Yoko Ono's "Don't Worry Kyoko." Prior to another
Tater Totz effort, 1989's
Sgt. Shonen's Exploding Plastic Eastman Band Mono! Stereo (recorded with ex-
Runaway Cherie Currie and future
Foo Fighter Pat Smear), the McDonalds detoured into another side project,
Anarchy 6, for the 1988 mock punk tribute
Hardcore Lives!Finally, in 1990
Redd Kross landed a deal with Atlantic, issuing the surprisingly straighforward
Third Eye. After an appearance (alongside
David Cassidy) in the kitschy 1991 film Spirit of 76, the band issued a handful of singles before 1993's
Phaseshifter, augmented by guitarist
Eddie Kurdziel, keyboardist
Gere Fennelly and drummer
Brian Reitzell. Minus
Fennelly,
Redd Kross returned in 1997 with
Show World. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide